Patterns available as Ravelry Downloads

Glow cowl is designed specifically for Filatura Di Crosa Shiro. However you may substitute it for any other super bulky yarn with long color gradients. You will need exactly one skein to make this cowl.

Fritillaria shawl takes its name from the namesake flower, Fritillaria meleagris, which is a fascinating flower. Aptly named Checkered Lily, its hanging bells sport a unique checkered pattern. Most frequently the checkering is in shades of purple (and occasionally white) marked with a faint checkerboard pattern.

Angarika is an Indian girl name meaning a flame-coloured flower of Palash or Flame of the Forest. The Flame of the Forest gets its name because its brilliant red flowers in bunches seem to set the forest on fire.

Few creatures on Earth rival the Blue Morpho for beauty. In the wild, the view of a Blue Morpho flying with its characteristic lazy, bouncing flight up a tropical river is sight never forgotten. The blue sheen in the tropical sun is so brilliant that even pilots can see them flying over the Amazon.

Dandelion is a lovely feminine shawl you can wear on a summer night. Worked with three different lace patterns, it reminds of a dandelion with fluffy head of weightless parachute seeds and lance-shaped leaves with jagged edge.

Fireweed is most eye-catching due to its brilliant pink floral spires blooming at the tops of tall, majestic, leafy stems. As the legend goes, when the fireweed reaches its full splendor, and pink blossoms ascend all the way to the top of the flower, winter will begin in six weeks.

For this shawl I took my inspiration from a variety of African violet, with its exquisitely ruffled petals, mauve at the base and white at the fringe. Like the blooms of Louisiana Lullaby this shawl is delicate and seem quite fragile.